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Body Defenses By: Mr. Hunter Pinworms Ebola Ebola 1. Is ebola infectious or noninfectious? 2. What kind of pathogen causes the disease? 3. What is the vector of ebola? 4. How is the pathogen transmitted? Diseases List as many diseases as you can think of. For each disease… 1. Is the disease infectious or noninfectious? 2. What kind of pathogen causes the disease? 3. What is the vector of the disease (if any)? 4. How is the pathogen transmitted? Pathogens can be living or non-living. Living bacteria, protists, fungi, worms Non-living viruses, viroids, prions Examples Bacterial infections: bubonic plague, cholera, dental caries, Lyme disease, pneumonia, typhoid fever Viral Infections: colds, influenza, chickenpox, measles, rubella, mumps, smallpox, hepatitis, polio, AIDS Pathogens Protists: malaria, Chagas disease, toxoplasmosis, giardiasis Fungi: ringworm, athlete’s foot, vaginal yeast infections, jock itch, histoplasmosis Destroying Pathogens Pasteurization Vaccines Antibiotics/antimicrobials Natural immunity Bread/Cereal The USDA allows for a small, legal, nontoxic amount of rat hairs and rat fecal material in breads and cereals. Thank goodness for our immune systems! Make a list of the ways that pathogens may enter the body… Pathogens must overcome your first lines of defense! Eyes Mouth Skin Nose How does each serve as a line of defense? Eyes - Enzymes Mouth- Enzymes Skin- Dead cells/oil Nose- mucus -> stomach What happens if pathogens make it through the first lines of defense? Blood flow to injured areas increases. Platelets help to seal the wound. The immune system responds. Immune System: the cells and tissues that recognize and attack foreign substances in the body Immune System Cell Type Macrophages Drawing Description Make antibodies T-cells Antigens Design a skit that demonstrates the immune response! Virus Macrophage B Cells T Cells Points to Ponder…. 1. What causes you to get a fever whenever you are sick? 2. Do you think your immune system responds to a pathogen faster on the second contact with that pathogen? Why? How? 3. Describe allergies, autoimmune diseases, AIDS, cancer. HIV/AIDS 1. Does HIV only affect homosexual people? 2. Approximately how many people are infected with HIV world wide? 3. How can you tell if somebody has HIV or AIDS? 4. Can you get AIDS from sharing the cup of an infected person? 5. What type of pathogen is HIV? HIV/AIDS 6. Can insects transmit HIV? 7. Is there a cure for AIDS? 8. Approximately what percentage of those infected with HIV are women? 9. Worldwide, what is the age range most infected with HIV? 10. Is it possible to prevent a women infected with HIV from having an infected baby? HIV/AIDS 1. no 2. 45 million 3. You can’t because it can be asymptomatic. 4. no 5. virus 6. no 7. no 8. 50% 9. 15-24 10. yes, with medicine HIV/AIDS Human Immunodeficiency Virus Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome Primary/Acute HIV Cold/flu-like symptoms, fever, fatigue, rash days/weeks after initial infection This period can also be asymptomatic. Body manufactures antibodies which are what HIV tests measure. HIV-> AIDS Generally, it takes 8-10 years for HIV to develop into AIDS. AIDS does not kill an individual, but opportunistic infections do! Opportunistic Infections How is HIV transmitted? HIV is spread by sexual contact with an infected person, by sharing needles and/or syringes (primarily for drug injection) with someone who is infected, or, less commonly (and now very rarely in countries where blood is screened for HIV antibodies), through transfusions of infected blood or blood clotting factors. Babies born to HIV-infected women may become infected before or during birth or through breast-feeding after birth. What do you think? 1. What someone does as a young adult has little impact on their chances of getting cancer later in life. 2. There is currently a cure for cancer, but the medical industry won’t tell the public about it because it is too expensive. 3. Electronic devices, like cell phones, can cause can cancer. What do you think? 4. Some injuries can cause cancer later in life. 5. Living in a polluted city is a greater risk for lung cancer than smoking a pack of cigarettes a day. 6. Treating cancer with surgery causes it to spread throughout the body. 7. Household bug spray causes cancer. What do you think? 8. You can prevent skin cancer by putting on one application of sunscreen at the start of the day. 9. Regularly eating meat cooked on a charcoal grill won’t increase your risk of cancer. 10. The risk of dying from cancer in the United States is increasing.